The 1970s are usually glossed over as a decade of the New Left's disintegration into sectarianism, triggered by the twin defeats of Nixon's election and the collapse of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1968-69. But the '70s were also a time of tremendous growth on the Left. The embarrassed silence retrospectively given to the politics of this time contradicts the self-understanding of 1970s radicals' finally "getting serious" about their Leftism, after the youthful rebellion of the 1960s. After the '60s decade of searching for new revolutionary agents, and faced with the reordering of global capital towards post-Fordism, the 1970s saw a return to working-class politics and Marxist approaches, in both theory and practice. The conventional imagination of the 1970s as the long retreat after the defeat of the late 1960s occludes an understanding of the political possibilities present in the 1970s. Our contemporary moment today provides an opportunity to rethink the politics of this period. The collapse of the anti-war movement and the disappointments of the Left's hopes for a reform agenda under Obama have exhausted the resurgence of 1960s-style Leftism that took place in the 2000s. The reconsideration of Marx in the wake of the current economic crisis, which parallels the neo-Marxism of the 1970s (if much attenuated by comparison), raises the question of the possibility of a Marxian politics that could fundamentally transform society. Therefore, in this panel discussion we will investigate the neglected significance of the legacy of 1970s-era Marxism for anticapitalist and emancipatory politics today.
Speakers:
- Carl Davidson (former SDS and Guardian weekly)
- Mel Rothenberg (former Sojourner Truth Organization)
- Tom Riley (International Bolshevik Tendency, former Spartacist League)
moderated by Spencer Leonard (Platypus Affiliated Society)
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